The Michigan Daily-Sunday, January 15, 1978-Page 3 I l (F YOU SEE lfWS HW)" 4CAIt.LZ'DAJIY' Park reveals cash giveaways CINEMA 11 Aud. A Angell Hall 41 Sunday, January 15 MIDNIGHT COWBOY Director-JOHN SCHLESINGER (1969) Ratso Rizzo, a small-time pimp and con artist meets Joe Buck, a naive, aspiring gigolo, in this depiction of the squalor and degradation at the heart of New York City. Winner of Academy Awards for Best Picture, Best Director, and Best Screenplay. JON VOIGHT is superb ig as a replica of all the 42nd Street cowboys and DUSTIN HOFFMAN as the gritty, glittery-eyed Ratso proves that his talent is unlimited. Ils 78 9P.M $1.50 SEOUL, South Korea (AP) - Korean lobbyist Tongsun Park told investiga- tors yesterday he distributed "hun- dreds of thousands of dollars" among U.S. congressmen and other Washing- ton officials, an observer at Park's in- terrogation reported. The observer, Rep. Bruce Caputo (R- N.Y.), a member of the House Ethics Committee, said the American investi- committee investigators conductin their own probe of the payoff scandal. He said Justice Department officia are primarily interested in crimes i volved in the alleged influence buyin but that the ethics committee is also i terested in other acts that may not co stitute crimes but violate congression rules. He planned to meet with U.S. Arr Join the Daily If classes aren't enough to keep you satisfied and you lust in your heart for a little more excitement, the Daily just may be the place for you. We'll be holding informational meetings this week for prospective staff members. Tuesday at 8 p.m. we'll be in East Quad's Greene Lounge and Bursley's West Lounge. Wednesday at 8 you can find us in South Quad's West Lounge and the Angela Davis Lounge at Markley. Or come to our_ Thursday meeting at 8 at the Daily office, 420 Maynard, upstairs. We'll have representatives from News, Sports, Business and Arts staffs at each of the meetings. Hope to see you there. Hot walks It's enough to warm the cockles of your heart, if not your tootsies, too. Ever noticed how a raging blizzard can whitewash the campus, but cer- tain stomping grounds remain clear of snow. Trudging through inches of snow and sludge, you suddenly happen upon a slab of concrete where the white stuff just doesn't stick. Well the same series of steam tunnels un- derneath the University that bring warm air and memories of a more temperate climate to your dorm room, says Physical Properties Director J.P. Weidenbach, also heat patches of campus walkways. If University planners had foreseen such side effects, the tunnels could have been built under sidewalks and the University's snow removal worries would have just melted away. Now, where steam tunnel and sidewalk intersect, a snowflake has as much chance for survival as a congregation of cumulus crystals in Hell. " Happenings... ... make Sunday quite the day of rest. If you're interested in helping with the Zolton Ferency for Governor campaign, go to 1910 Hill St. at 11 a.m. at 11:30 a.m., Dr. Howard Simon from ACLU speaks uninhibitedly about "Free speech for those we despise most" at Hillel, 1429 Hill St. also at Hillel, at 7:30 p.m., the student UJA campaign is open to everyone. That's it for today, but if you want to plan for ahead, register now for six weekly sessions on changes in your aging parents to be held Wednesday evenings from Jan. 25 to March 1 at the Child and Family Service office, 2301 Platt Road. Call Alida Silverman at 971-6520 ... Tomorrow, catch a double feature, sponsored by the Math Dept.,,in 3201 A.H. at 4 p.m. "Shapes of the Future" and "Some Unsolved Problems in Geometry" ought to be titillating fare indeed ... Also at 4, the Pound House offers German language lessons for kids in the International Center, 603 E. Madison ... At 6, Trotter House, 1443 Washtenaw Ave., hosts a dinner and speaker for Martin Luther Kind day ... Then, at 7, attend a meeting of the Undergraduate Political Science Association in 2003 A.H. ... or get into those income tax deductions at a training session in Lecture Rm. 1, MLB ... or try MLB, Aud. 3, for two films on domestic violence, presented by Women's Studies: "Incest: The Victim Nobody Believes" and "Battered Women" ... finally, Rabbi Jacob Levi teaches a class in Jewish law at . Hillel, 1429 Hill St. Sponsored by The Flame the meeting for women is at 8 and for men at 9:15 p,m. Have a nice day! i0 Quacked lifestyle According to some huffy authorities in Helsinki, Finland, his racy life-style was clearly setting a bad example for tots. For example, snor- ted the indignant chairman of Helsinki's youth committee, he has been "going with the same woman for 50 years without result." And who, you might ask, was this flaming playboy? Why, none other than that old swinger, Donald Duck. Apparpntly, some proper Finnish folks felt that Helsinki libraries should stop subscribing to the Walt Disney comics because they're "not informative" and, Well, a little unsavory. After all, would you want your kids perusing a magazine in which "not a single normal family" was featured, but instead a screwball collection of relatives like Uncle Scrooge and nephews Huey, Dewey and Looey? " On the outside.. . Take your typical dreary wintry day - snow flurries, gray skies, oc- casional gusts of wind. Give it a high of 18* and you have today's weather. Do the same thing again, except add four to the high (yes, you mathe- maticians, that makes 220) and you have tomorrow's weather. What a bore. ,5 in- n- ial M- KUROSAWA'S 11 MMM" 1954 'It was just very embarrassing, here 10,000 miles away from home, to have a foreign government prosecutor ask a man, "How many congressmen did you give money to?" In essence, how corrupt our government was.' - Rep. Bruce Caputo (R-N. Y.) .SEVEN SAMURAI Perhaps the best known of Japanese films, this epic tale of a band of Samurai defending a village against raiding bandits has a driving musical score, com- licated .subplots and dynamic photography. Starring TOSH'RO MIFURE. In Japanese (with subtitles). *** Cinema Guild is now accepting membership applications*** (inquire at ticket desk) MON.: Kurosawa's DOES 'ka-den (FREE at 8) CINEMA GUILD TONIGHT AT 7& 10 OLD ARCH. AUD. Admission$1.50 U gators covered "dozens and dozens" of people in the Congress and executive branch in their second day of ques- tioning Park about allegations he tried to buy favors for South Korea on Capitol Hill. Caputo did not name the people discussed. "IT WAS JUST very embarrassing, here 10,000 miles away from home, to have a foreign government prosecutor ask a man, 'How many congressmen did you give money to?' In essence how corrupt our government was," Caputo told reporters. "It discredits Congress. It's very saddening." Park was questioned both by U.S. Justice Department officials and by Korean investigators. Caputo, attending the sessions as an observer for the ethics committee, told reporters Park's testimony yesterday contained only "one or two surprises." FRIDAY WAS MUCH more eventful in the respect," he added. More than 20 former and present congressmen have acknowledged receiving money or other gifts from Park but denied any wrongdoing. The South Korean has been indicted by a Washington federal grand jury on 36 counts of bribery, mail fraud and other charges for alleged influence buying for the Seoul government of President Park Chung-hee. Under a U.S.-Korean accord, he is granted im- munity from these criminal charges in return for truthful testimony at Justice Department proceedings. D.G. The ethics committee has demanded that Park also testify before it, but tes- timony before Congress is not'covered in the agreement. ACTING DEPUT~Y U.S. Attorney General Benjamin Civiletti is leading the group of six American investigators in the questioning, which they said would last about 10 days. Park was questioned for five hours Friday and three hours yesterday, and a lie detec- tor was reported used both days. Caputo, the only person among these present to comment immediately after the hearing, said a wide range of people, including Koreans, was covered in connection with cash transfers, check transfers and gifts, such as jewels, given by Park. The congressman declined to give de- tails of the testimony, but he said the session yesterday was "very thorough and very complete" and Park an- swered most of the questions with a simple "yes" or "no." CAPUTO SAID Park's testimony in Seoul would be insufficient for ethics bassador Richard Snider to discuss how to work out an arrangement acceptable to all parties for Tongsun Park to testify before congressional commit- tees. Caputo said the ethics committee also is seeking voluntary testimony from two other South Korean ambassadors to Washington, Kim Dong-jo and Hahm Pyong-choon, and from Lee Hu-rak, former director of the Korean Central Intelligence Agency in connection with the scandal. THE U OF M's OFFICE OF MAJOR EVENTS PRESENTS: WwILLIE IESO SPECIAL GUEST AND WITY IOffTT WITH GUEST DON BOWMAN Hey Baby.. . going my way? I Ode \ o1 C 1{ '4 find out! Advertise in the Daily Classifieds under Transportation. Call 764-0557 11 I Sunday February 5 Crisler Arena Ann Arbor 7:30 PM Reserved Seats $7-$6 Tickets available at the Michigan Union Box Office in Ann Arbor, (763-2071), M-F 11:30-5:30 Sorry, no personal checks. Tickets also available at all Hudsons, at Paul Webbs Record Store and the Huckleberry Party Store in Ypsilanti. Or order by mail by sending self-addressed, stamped envelope and money order only to: Willie Nelson, Michigan Union Box Office, Ann Arbor, Michigan 48109 , I -COUPON--2 for 1 Special -COUPON- IBuy 1 Super Sala-GET 1 FREE Good: MONDAY THRU THURSDAY January 16, 17, 18, 19 NOT AVAILABLE FOR CARRY OUT GOOD AFTER 3 P.M. ONLY Longevity Cookery 31.4 E . Liberty GOURMET NATURAL FOOD RESTAURANT (313) 662-2019 Oklahoma has furnished two Heisman Award winners, Billy Vessels in 1952 and Steve Owens in 1969. U U TREAT YOURSELF AND A FRIEND TO THE FINEST! The Professional Theatre Program .tr. VARIETY AND EXCELLENCE IN ENTERTAINMENT p14) eclipse jazz presents A N E V E N I N G W I T H C HICK HERBIE C OREA&HANCOCK I N C ON C E R T Broadway's Family Musical Hitl Tom Mallow and Gordon Crowe present obber mde a foot-stompin' musical! ~ I TQrr0ir .. _._. ..._.r. .... ... .,.._ .x,_._,r.\Y. .i.1J L. J. li f I If. It, t f E FNATNA[ITOUR OF THE WORLD'S GREAT ESt MUSAL Book and Lyrics by ALFRED UHRY -Basedo EUI Music by ROBERT WALDMAN Iupon the Novella by IDORA WELTY EDWARD MULHARE ANNE ROGERS -- - -_ .i 'SPARKLING! UNUSUAL! STYLISH! FAMILY FUN!" Cl, games NY Times "LIVELY! SASSY! JOYOUS! A HUMDINGER!". - .- .a LERNER &6LOEWE'S jan21; ~9A& 9 i "~A BROADWAY ROMP! 1 LOVED IT! I ABSOLUTELY LOVED IT!" TONY AWARD WINNER! 8pm. I I 11